by Michael Bailey | Sep 2, 2013 | Privacy and Security
By JOE SHARKEY, New York Times MY wife looked up from her iPad, where she was routinely reviewing a credit card statement. “You’re going to Bogotá?” she asked. “Not that I know of,” I replied. “So I’m guessing you also didn’t buy a $10 cup of coffee yesterday in...
by Michael Bailey | Aug 17, 2013 | News, Technology
By JAMES GLANZ for the New York Times IF pencil marks on some colossal doorjamb could measure the growth of the Internet, they would probably be tracking the amount of data sloshing through the public network that spans the planet. Christened by the World Economic...
by Michael Bailey | Jun 12, 2013 | News, Privacy and Security, Technology
I keep saying I should do this, and then don’t. That doesn’t mean it isn’t a good idea. It is! I have a ton of passwords. Lots of people do. Most of us with a bucket of ’em experience alternating states of fear, loss, control, power, suspicion,...
by Michael Bailey | Jun 3, 2013 | Technology
I was going to add a sub headline, “For those who do this sort of thing.” Admittedly, I don’t snap away at a notch below the speed of light, nor do I determine that any moment of my life beyond the usual banality of life requires a photographic...
by Michael Bailey | Sep 3, 2012 | News
True or False: Technology is dominated by men, guys, dudes, nerds with funny glasses, who live for online gaming, energy drinks, and relentless bonding with the computer screen. Yea, it is totally true. It will probably stay that way for a quite some time. But, its...